Gas-phase reactions of model carbosulfonium ions (CH(3)-S(+)=CH(2;) CH(3)CH(2)-S(+)=CH(2) and Ph-S(+)=CH(2)) and an O-analogue carboxonium ion (CH(3)-O(+)=CH(2)) with acyclic (isoprene, 1,3-butadiene, methyl vinyl ketone) and cyclic (1,3-cyclohexadiene, thiophene, furan) conjugated dienes were systematically investigated by pentaquadrupole mass spectrometry. As corroborated by B3LYP/6-311 G(d,p) calculations, the carbosulfonium ions first react at large extents with the dienes forming adducts via simple addition. The nascent adducts, depending on their stability and internal energy, react further via two competitive channels: (1) in reactions with acyclic dienes via cyclization that yields formally [4+2(+)] cycloadducts, or (2) in reactions with the cyclic dienes via dissociation by HSR loss that yields methylenation (net CH(+) transfer) products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe association of solid phase extraction with molecularly imprinted polymers (MIP) and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) is applied to the direct extraction and quantitation of benzodiazepines in human plasma. The target analytes are sequestered by MIP and directly analyzed by ESI-MS. Due to the MIP highly selective extraction, ionic suppression during ESI is minimized; hence no separation is necessary prior to ESI-MS, which greatly increases analytical speed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA few hydrocarbons in gasoline display relatively high solubility in water and may function therefore as its characteristic set of natural markers. These markers are detected from an aqueous gasoline extract via membrane introduction mass spectrometry (MIMS) producing characteristic chemical profiles. MIMS adds a second selectivity criterion detecting only the water soluble hydrocarbons that most easily permeate through a silicone membrane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrap-and-release membrane introduction mass spectrometry (T&R-MIMS) with a removable direct insertion membrane probe (DIMP) is used to quantitate a variety of trace phenolic compounds in water after acetylation. The procedure is simple, rapid and robust, producing linear and reproducible responses for phenolic compounds with varying polarities. Acetylation minimizes the polarity effects of ring substituents; hence, T&R-MIMS of the acetylated phenols provides lower and more uniform limits of detection (LODs) (2-15 microg L(-1)) than those obtained by direct T&R-MIMS analysis of the non-derivatized phenols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing a cellulose dialysis membrane and aqueous solutions of common drugs as a proof-of-principle example, we demonstrate that solid but permeable and flexible membranes can be used as interfaces for the direct analysis of solution constituents via easy ambient sonic-spray ionization mass spectrometry. This new combination of MS techniques, herein termed EASI-MIMS, promotes droplet pick up of the analyte from the external surface of the membrane from where the analyte has selectively permeated for proper mass spectrometry characterization and quantitation. Possible application of EASI-MIMS such as the environmental analyses of effluents, on-line monitoring of fermentation and biotransformations and on-line pharmacokinetic blood analysis are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid Commun Mass Spectrom
September 2007
Sonic spray ionization is shown to create a supersonic cloud of charged droplets able to promote efficient desorption and ionization of drugs directly from the surfaces of commercial drug tablets at ambient conditions. Compared with desorption electrospray ionization (DESI), desorption sonic spray ionization (DeSSI) is advantageous since it uses neither heating nor high voltages at the spray capillary. DeSSI therefore provides a more friendly environment in which to perform ambient mass spectrometry (MS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheoretical calculations and gas-phase mass spectrometric studies were performed for the reaction of the naked (NO2+) and monosolvated (CH3NO2.NO2+) nitronium ion with several monosubstituted aromatic compounds. From these studies, we propose a general model for regioselectivity based on the single-electron transfer (SET) mechanism and an alternative mechanistic scheme for electrophilic aromatic nitration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy Yates, Bouma, and Radom's definition, distonic radical ions are those formally arising by ionization of diradicals or zwitterionic molecules (including ylides). These ions differ, therefore, from conventional radical ions by displaying the charge site and unpaired electron site (spin) localized mandatorily on separate atoms or group of atoms; that is, these sites are separated in all of their major resonance forms. Many conventional radical ions with a major resonance form in which charge and spin sites reside formally on the same atom or group of atoms display, however, high degree of discretionary (non-mandatory) charge-spin separation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGas-phase reactions of several acylium and thioacylium ions, that is H2C=N-C+=O, H2C=N-C+=S, O=C=N-C+=O, S=C=N-C+=O, H3C-C+=O, and (CH3)2N-C+=O, with both a model isocyanate and isothiocyanate, that is, C2H5-N=C=O and C2H5-N=C=S, were investigated using tandem-in-space pentaquadrupole mass spectrometry. In these reactions, the formation of mono- and double-addition products is observed concurrently with proton transfer products. The double-addition products are far more favored in reactions with ethyl isocyanate, whereas the reactions with ethyl isothiocyanate form, preferentially, either the mono-addition product or proton transfer products, or both.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe intrinsic reactivity of eight gaseous, mass-selected 2-azabutadienyl cations toward polar [4(+) + 2] cycloaddition with ethyl vinyl ether has been investigated by pentaquadrupole mass spectrometric experiments. Cycloaddition occurs readily for all the ions and, with the only exception of those from the N-acyl 2-azabutadienyl cations (N-acyliminium ions), the cycloadducts are found to dissociate readily upon collision activation (CID) both by retro-Diels-Alder reaction and by a characteristic loss of an ethanol (46u) neutral molecule. Ethanol loss from the intact polar [4(+) + 2] cycloadduct functions therefore as a structurally diagnostic test: 72 u neutral gain followed by 46 u neutral loss, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel reaction of acylium and thioacylium ions, polar [4 + 2(+)] Diels-Alder cycloaddition with 1,3-dienes and O-heterodienes, has been systematically investigated in the gas phase (Eberlin MN, Cooks RG. J. Am.
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